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#1
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For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had
some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave |
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On Oct 19, 12:24*pm, DaveS wrote:
For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave http://water.usgs.gov/ National data.Frequency of reporting varies by state and individual site. MA, for instance varies from 12 hrs to 2 hrs in reporting frequencies. Generally larger streams report more frequently. A few sites also report water temp. www.h20line.com Operated by hydro power companies in New England. Reports are discharge rates from various hydro dams. Generally within 5 minutes of real time. |
#3
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On Oct 19, 11:59*am, george9219 wrote:
On Oct 19, 12:24*pm, DaveS wrote: For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave http://water.usgs.gov/ National data.Frequency of reporting varies by state and individual site. MA, for instance varies from 12 hrs to 2 hrs in reporting frequencies. Generally larger streams report more frequently. A few sites also report water temp. www.h20line.com Operated by hydro power companies in New England. Reports are discharge rates from various hydro dams. Generally within 5 minutes of real time. I saw the subject line and thought you were referencing the Current River in Missouri. We use the USGS data. It is helpful for knowing how a major deluge will affect fishing. They also provide CFS forecasts based on current flows and the weather forecast. Paul |
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On Oct 19, 9:59*am, george9219 wrote:
On Oct 19, 12:24*pm, DaveS wrote: For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave http://water.usgs.gov/ National data.Frequency of reporting varies by state and individual site. MA, for instance varies from 12 hrs to 2 hrs in reporting frequencies. Generally larger streams report more frequently. A few sites also report water temp. www.h20line.com Operated by hydro power companies in New England. Reports are discharge rates from various hydro dams. Generally within 5 minutes of real time. Thanx George. I noticed on the USGS site that some of the Mass. flow stations have lost their funding and will be shut down. I wonder if that is happening across the country. Dave |
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On Oct 20, 12:28*am, DaveS wrote:
On Oct 19, 9:59*am, george9219 wrote: On Oct 19, 12:24*pm, DaveS wrote: For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave http://water.usgs.gov/ National data.Frequency of reporting varies by state and individual site. MA, for instance varies from 12 hrs to 2 hrs in reporting frequencies. Generally larger streams report more frequently. A few sites also report water temp. www.h20line.com Operated by hydro power companies in New England. Reports are discharge rates from various hydro dams. Generally within 5 minutes of real time. Thanx George. I noticed on the USGS site that some of the Mass. flow stations have lost their funding and will be shut down. I wonder if that is happening across the country. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The site for the TVA area which includes TN, NC, GA, and ALA is: http://www.tva.com/river/lakeinfo/index.htm It gives info on the tailwaters as well as some free flowing streams in the area, especially those in and around the Smokeys. J. |
#6
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On Oct 20, 11:15*am, Jack wrote:
On Oct 20, 12:28*am, DaveS wrote: On Oct 19, 9:59*am, george9219 wrote: On Oct 19, 12:24*pm, DaveS wrote: For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave http://water.usgs.gov/ National data.Frequency of reporting varies by state and individual site. MA, for instance varies from 12 hrs to 2 hrs in reporting frequencies. Generally larger streams report more frequently. A few sites also report water temp. www.h20line.com Operated by hydro power companies in New England. Reports are discharge rates from various hydro dams. Generally within 5 minutes of real time. Thanx George. I noticed on the USGS site that some of the Mass. flow stations have lost their funding and will be shut down. I wonder if that is happening across the country. Dave- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The site for the TVA area which includes TN, NC, GA, and ALA is: * *http://www.tva.com/river/lakeinfo/index.htm * It gives info on the tailwaters as well as some free flowing streams in the area, especially those in and around the Smokeys. J.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Thanx. Im starting to wonder if it makes sense to gather up a list of web addresses across the country that access stream flow/conditions data. So far we've got . . . United States Geodetic Survey Measured Stream flows 50 States http://water.usgs.gov/ Tennessee Valley Authority TVA States, TN, NC, GA, and ALA http://www.tva.com/river/lakeinfo/index.htm Washington Dept of Ecology WA. State https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 Hydro power companies and other Sources Stream flows and Dam releases for 39 States www.h20line.com * *Ive not yet figured out how to use this one Anyway you get the basic idea. USGS provides some coverage in all states but other flow measuring networks at the state, regional and local level cover even more streams. Some of the sites only give point in time measures, some near real time continuous measures, some just CFS, others include air, water and O2 measures. Seems like a beefy and useful tight one page list could be useful for trip planning etc.. Wonder is any outfit already has a mega site with all this stuff? Dave |
#7
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DaveS wrote:
For years I did not pay much attention to river flow levels. If i had some time to fish I just showed up and whatever was happening, whether at flood or dewatered, I was there and made the best of it. But the last few years, and especially since I bought a streach, Ive been paying much more attention. Washington state has a pretty extensive set of flow and temp measuring stations linked by telemetry to a website. https://fortress.wa.gov/ecy/wrx/wrx/...asp?sta=32B110 What are other States doing? Where do you go for current flow data? How close to realtime is the data you can access? Dave The river flows It flows to the sea Wherever that river goes That's where I want to be Flow river flow Let your waters wash down Take me from this road To some other town All he wanted Was to be free And that's the way It turned out to be Flow river flow Let your waters wash down Take me from this road To some other town Flow river flow Past the shaded tree Go river, go Go to the sea Flow to the sea The river flows It flows to the sea Wherever that river goes That's where I want to be Flow river flow Let your waters wash down Take me from this road To some other town Roger McGuinn - Ballad Of Easy Rider Lyrics -- Cut "to the chase" for my email address. |
#8
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On Oct 19, 10:24*am, DaveS wrote:
How close to realtime is the data you can access? At http://montana-riverboats.com, if you hover the mouse over "Stream Flows" at screen middle bottom, you get (most of) Montana's most important flows in a popup panel, updated nightly, using cron and a little php/curl screen-scraping...querying the gov flows site at 3:00am in the morning mountain time. It takes about 90 seconds to complete, so it can't be done from a mouse click. But they only update the data once a day anyway. So once a day updates are as good as it gets. |
#9
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On Oct 30, 7:59*pm, salmobytes wrote:
On Oct 19, 10:24*am, DaveS wrote: How close to realtime is the data you can access? Athttp://montana-riverboats.com, if you hover the mouse over "Stream Flows" at screen middle bottom, you get (most of) Montana's most important flows in a popup panel, updated nightly, using cron and a little php/curl screen-scraping...querying the gov flows site at 3:00am in the morning mountain time. It takes about 90 seconds to complete, so it can't be done from a mouse click. But they only update the data once a day anyway. *So once a day updates are as good as it gets. Thanx. That adds another source. Two questions: I am assuming the data are in Cfs, so would that figure represent an average for the previous 24 hours, or is it an instantaneous (point in time measure)? Do you know where the data comes from original source)? What's with that figure for the Madison below Hebgen Lake? Is it actually 1.something cubic feet per second? That's worse than a household well. Dave Thanx |
#10
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On Oct 31, 2:02*pm, DaveS wrote:
On Oct 30, 7:59*pm, salmobytes wrote: On Oct 19, 10:24*am, DaveS wrote: How close to realtime is the data you can access? Athttp://montana-riverboats.com, if you hover the mouse over "Stream Flows" at screen middle bottom, you get (most of) Montana's most important flows in a popup panel, updated nightly, using cron and a little php/curl screen-scraping...querying the gov flows site at 3:00am in the morning mountain time. It takes about 90 seconds to complete, so it can't be done from a mouse click. But they only update the data once a day anyway. *So once a day updates are as good as it gets. Thanx. That adds another source. Two questions: I am assuming the data are in Cfs, so would that figure represent an average for the previous 24 hours, or is it an instantaneous (point in time measure)? Do you know where the data comes from original source)? What's with that figure for the Madison below Hebgen Lake? Is it actually 1.something cubic feet per second? Judging by comparison with the rest of the figures in the table and just a pinch of good sense, I'd suggest that perhaps there's a typo in there somewhere. That's worse than a household well. You've got a household well that pumps over twelve gallons per second? I'll bet six gajillion of the diminutive member's dollars that you don't. Dave Thanx You're welcome. g. |
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